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Threat Modeling Gameplay with EoP

Threat Modeling Gameplay with EoP

By : Brett Crawley
4.9 (7)
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Threat Modeling Gameplay with EoP

Threat Modeling Gameplay with EoP

4.9 (7)
By: Brett Crawley

Overview of this book

Are you looking to navigate security risks, but want to make your learning experience fun? Here's a comprehensive guide that introduces the concept of play to protect, helping you discover the threats that could affect your software design via gameplay. Each chapter in this book covers a suit in the Elevation of Privilege (EoP) card deck (a threat category), providing example threats, references, and suggested mitigations for each card. You’ll explore the methodology for threat modeling—Spoofing, Tampering, Repudiation, Information Disclosure, and Elevation of Privilege (S.T.R.I.D.E.) with Privacy deck and the T.R.I.M. extension pack. T.R.I.M. is a framework for privacy that stands for Transfer, Retention/Removal, Inference, and Minimization. Throughout the book, you’ll learn the meanings of these terms and how they should be applied. From spotting vulnerabilities to implementing practical solutions, the chapters provide actionable strategies for fortifying the security of software systems. By the end of this book, you will be able to recognize threats, understand privacy regulations, access references for further exploration, and get familiarized with techniques to protect against these threats and minimize risks.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
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13
Glossary
14
Further Reading
15
Licenses for third party content

Repudiation

Repudiation is plausible deniability, or rather the inability to prove that someone did something. When you think about repudiation, you should think about threats that affect your ability to hold people accountable. Three things are required for an action to be non-repudiable: the what, the who, and the when, and this information should be immutable.

Figure 4.1: Destroying the logs/evidence

In this chapter, we will cover the threats described in the Repudiation suit in the Elevation of Privilege card deck, including an additional four cards from the T.R.I.M. extension to the game. We’ll go through some examples of repudiation threats; I’ll give you references with each example where you can get more information and I will also suggest what mitigations and controls you can put in place to protect against the threat or at least reduce the risk.

By the end of the chapter, you’ll have a better understanding and awareness of...

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